وإياك شذى الورد- شكرا اختي على مرورك
وإياك شذى الورد- شكرا اختي على مرورك
jeela :
وإياك شذى الورد- شكرا اختي على مروركوإياك شذى الورد- شكرا اختي على مرورك
jeela :
وإياك شذى الورد- شكرا اختي على مروركوإياك شذى الورد- شكرا اختي على مرورك
1- for sale or on sale
If you’re selling something, it’s for sale; but if you lower the price, it goes on sale.
2-foot or feet
You can use eight-foot boards to side a house, but “foot” is correct only in this sort of adjectival phrase combined with a number (and usually hyphenated). The boards are eight feet (not foot) long. It’s always X feet per second and X feet away
3-footnotes vs endnotes
About the time that computers began to make the creation and printing of footnotes extremely simple and cheap, style manuals began to urge a shift away from them to endnotes printed at the ends of chapters or at the end of a book or paper rather than at the foot of the page. I happen to think this was a big mistake; but in any case, if you are using endnotes, don’t call them “footnotes.”
4- formally vs formerly
These two are often mixed up in speech. If you are doing something in a formal manner, you are behaving formally; but if you previously behaved differently, you did so formerly.
5- for one or for one thing
People often say “for one” when they mean “for one thing”: “I really want to go to the movie. For one, Kevin Spacey is my favorite actor.” (One what?) The only time you should use “for one” by itself to give an example of something is when you have earlier mentioned a class to which the example belongs: “There are a lot of reasons I don’t want your old car. For one, there are squirrels living in the upholstery.” (One reason.)
6-for free
Some people object to “for free” because any sentence containing the phrase will read just as well without the “for,” but it is standard English.